One player set a record for most consecutive games with a goal. The other became the all-time leading scorer in women’s international soccer history. On Wednesday, Jozy Altidore and Abby Wambach were rewarded for their standout 2013 campaigns with their teams’ highest honors, named Male and Female Athlete of the Year by U.S. Soccer.

For Wambach, it is the sixth time she has claimed the honor, having now won the award in three of the last four years. In 2013, the Western New York Flash star ran her international scoring record to 160 goals, passing five-time winner Mia Hamm’s FIFA record of 158 goals.

With the award, Wambach also passed Hamm to become the U.S.’s only six-time Athlete of the Year winner. From her Q&A with U.S. Soccer:

“Of course I’ve never really been competing against Mia. The kind of legacy she left behind is one that makes the people who came after want to strive to better the team and the program; those are the kind of values she wanted to teach. Hopefully, I can pass that on to the others who come behind me as well.”

Altidore, winning his honor for the first time, posted a career high eight goals for the U.S. in 2013, setting a team record by scoring in five consecutive matches between June 2 and Aug. 14. Having helped AK Alkmaar to the Dutch Cup in Holland, Altidore’s play earned the 24-year-old a move to the Premier League when he signed with Sunderland.

From his Q&A with U.S. Soccer:

“It’s a huge honor. I’m really excited. It’s nice to know people thought I had that much of an influence on the National Team.”

“I just tried to keep a routine and keep it when I was with the National Team which is difficult because it’s a whole different environment with different needs. I tried as much as possible to replicate what was working for me. Fortunately it worked out that it was a really successful year for me and the team.”

The federation also handed out awards to their youth athletes of the year, with Columbus Crew midfielder Wil Trapp and Paris Saint-Germain forward Lindsey Horan winning the male and female awards.

And for the second time, U.S. Soccer also honored a Disabled Athlete of the Year, with paralympic national team member Rene Renteria winning the award.

Here are the former winners of each honor, as distributed by U.S. Soccer: